Pretty Pinner

Pinner was just a name until the other week when I caught a glimpse of its high street from the H13 bus I was on travelling from Ruislip lido (see my post at https://longoio3.com/2020/06/15/londons-best-beach/). I was amazed at how a Greater London suburb could produce something so much like a rural village scene with its half-timbered buildings and church tower at the top of the hilly street.

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We returned to Pinner for the mundane but exceedingly necessary task of collecting a toaster from its Argos store nestled within a Sainsbury conveniently close to the station on the Metropolitan line so eloquently hymned by the heritage writer John Betjeman.

Pinner dates back to the tenth century when it was first recorded as a hamlet called Pinnora after the river Pinn which runs through the town and which can be glimpsed in a handerchief of a garden on the main road.

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The parish church of St John the Baptist dates back to the fourteenth century and there are domestic dwellings surviving from the sixteenth century.

However, it was with the coming of the Metropolitan railway that Pinner expanded rapidly, especially during the inter-war period when a number of significant art-deco flats and houses were built. Here’s one I spotted, the grade II listed Elm Court with its graceful entrance arch.

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Pinner is a traditional home of retired colonels and stockbrokers and it’s clearly an affluent part of London with leafy avenues and large houses but I didn’t find it particularly snooty or pretentious unlike other ‘affluent ‘areas such as Hampstead or Belgravia.

Strangely Pinner has no Waitrose, an iconic sign of gentility if there ever was one, but surprisingly it possesses a very well stocked Lidl discount store at the top of its high street instead.

We came across a fine fish and chip shop and, with one of the largest cods we’ve seen in a long time, headed to the delightful Pinner memorial park nearby.

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Formerly the garden of a large house known as West House, once owned by Horatia, the daughter of Horatio Nelson and Lady Hamilton, the park is small but perfectly formed.

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It has a fine collection of tall pines and other more exotic trees harking back to the park’s history,

a sweet duck pond,

a cafe (now open for take-aways) and a museum dedicated to Pinner’s best known past inhabitant Heath Robinson, the cartoonist who drew those wonderfully devised machines with such complex pulleys and wheels to perform the simplest of tasks like the one for an easier way of conveying green peas to the mouth,

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the tabby silencer, which automatically throws water at serenading cats

and the one for testing artificial teeth.

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Unfortunately the museum, which also hosts contemporary art exhibitions still remained closed at the time of our visit – a good reason to return.

The Memorial garden are so called because they also contain within West House a memorial to all those killed in the two wars.

With its annual street market, one of the few places left in the UK that still holds one, the lowest crime record in all London, its good schools, its Carluccio Italian restaurant, its balanced ethnic mix, its wide variety of individual shops, its high life-expectancy rate and its healthy climate Pinner is clearly an attractive place to investigate.

Next time I think I’ll explore some of the town’s art deco treasures and also take in the expansive Pinner country park…and, of course, have another delicious fish ‘n chips from the five-star rated ‘Ideal Fish Bar’.

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First-Rate Second-Hand

The second-hand market, or ‘mercatino dell’usato’, is thriving in the Lucchesia with several outlets in the area.

Two of my favourites are ‘Mercatopoli’ in the Arancio area of Lucca. Their website is quite well organised with a list of items on sale and can be found at:

https://lucca.mercatopoli.it

The other is the ‘mercatino dell’usato’ which can be found near the straight stretch of road leading into the city from Bagni Di Lucca. Its web site is not so brilliant and is at:

Home

It’s best just to turn up and see what wonders are found in this veritable Aladdin’s cave. Here is a random selection of things we chanced upon yesterday stored in the cavernous holds of this ex-factory:

 

 

As can be seen there’s everything to be found here and most of it is adequately organized (apart from the clothes section which is a dismal jumble – although my wife managed to find a couple of attractive items.)

The mercatino (little market) is really a mercatone (big market) and one could happily spend some hours bargain-hunting in it. I was particularly drawn to the outside salvage section with garden furniture and various house fittings.

Italy does not have  a panoply of charity shops such as can be found in the UK but it more than makes up for this with its mercatini. These bric-a-brac depositories can also be useful if one is moving, down-sizing or just getting rid of superfluous clutter: one takes one’s stuff to the mercatino and agrees a selling price. The shop adds its own commission and the longer the item remains unsold the lower its price becomes.

I try to de-clutter from time to time and the mercatini certainly do help!

Responsible Local Supermarkets

Supermarkets are often accused of being irresponsible for several reasons, some of which are:

  1. They help to close down local shops (just look at BDL’s high street)
  2. They spread pollution through clients’ cars driving there
  3. They encourage food wastage by bulk buying and special offers.
  4. They throw away a lot of the overdue date items instead of distributing them to people on low incomes.
  5. Some of them underpay and overwork their staff.
  6. They are too often built on green field rather than brown-field sites.

It makes, therefore, a pleasant change when some supermarkets show a bit of social community consciousness. I won’t advertise this particular supermarket except to say that it’s near Ghivizzano.

There’s clearly-marked encouragement to buy food which is near its sell-by date at a discount.

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There are collection points for voluntary giving of food to stray, and abandoned pets and animals (with a free token gift if one contributes).

There are also collection points for giving of food to needy families, so rapidly and shamefully increasing in Italy (not to mention what is happening in the UK and what will become worse after March 29th this year).

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There are also posters making people aware that abuse towards women (in a country where there’s at least one woman killed by a man every three days) doesn’t have to be visibly seen but can also be psychological and kept out of sight.

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I wish more supermarkets had a social conscience like this…

Another way that supermarkets can be more socially aware is with regard to the payments they make to their sources. Recently, because of the low price they obtained for their milk, Sardinian dairy farmers protested by throwing away large quantities of the stuff. ‘It’s just not worth us selling milk at the prices we get for it.’

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An extreme protest indeed…at least the farmers could have donated the milk to needy families. Meanwhile, a well-known UK supermarket chain has issued these labels on its milk products. I thank Sandra Pettitt for bringing this to my attention and for sending me these photographs.

What’s Eating Bagni di Lucca?

Much of Bagni di Lucca’s High Street, the Corso Umberto I, is looking decidedly shabby. The upper section in particular, leading towards the post office, has seen so many shops closed down in the past fifteen years.

Gone is the hardware and ironmongers, closed since Mr Marroni’s decease a couple of years ago.

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The best patisserie and coffee shop in Bagni is also shuttered, although it still contains all its fitments.

 

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Daddo’s shoe shop has long since stopped supplying goods to Bagni di Lucca’s well-heeled inhabitants.

Sandra’s household-ware shop is in the last throes of its closing down sale.

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And so the sad list goes on. There are vaguely hopeful signs stating that the premises are for sale to new businesses but when will these ever arrive to enliven Bagni’s high street?

It’s all becoming more and more like the scenario in that nostalgic film ‘What’s eating Gilbert Grape’ starring Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio, among others, when the local mid-west store sells out to the hypermarket.

Of course, we all know the reasons for Bagni’s High Street decay:

  1. Declining population.
  2. Move to shopping in hypermarkets (at Gallicano, for example).
  3. Increasing on-line sales.
  4. Retirement of shop-keepers with no offspring interested in carrying on the family business.
  5. Heftier government taxes.
  6. Difficult parking situations
  7. A relatively short summer tourist season.
  8. An aging population which does not need purchasing new items for the first time.
  9. A difficult economic situation enveloping the nation.
  10. An ever decreasing choice of items at prices which could be beaten for value at several other places.
  11. Restricted opening hours with long lunch-hour breaks and Sunday closing.
  12. A lack of attractiveness in the appearance of several shops.

It’s all very sad but is clearly not peculiar to Bagni di Lucca. It all started in the USA with out-of-town shopping malls, spread to the UK’s high streets, which are pretty dire in too many cases, and is now affecting Italy’s social in-town meeting points to an increasing extent.

What to do? Just think of the features you’ll miss out if Bagni’s High Street carries on in this way.

  1. No quick repairs on items you have bought, like vacuum cleaners and TVs.
  2. No friendly chats with helpful shop-keepers ready to advise you on products or keep up with the local gossip…
  3. No shops with items different from the uniform boringness of chain stores and hypermarkets.
  4. A High Street with decreasing signs of humans.
  5. A town that is, in brief, slowly dying on its feet.

That’s why we should continue to patronise as far as possible our local shop-keepers even it is just a matter of buying spare bags for that vacuum cleaner or a filter for a moka coffee or a packet of picture hooks. For if this depressing trend carries on much further the only shops left in Bagni di Lucca will be a couple of catering establishments, estate agents and, hopefully, the tourist office.

As someone rightly said: Bagni di Lucca’s shop-keepers are its true, and largely unsung, heroes.

Le Ostriche di Whitstable

Situata sulla costiera nord della contea di Kent, Whitstable è un ridente centro le cui fondazioni risalgono all’era romana. Cresciuto da un villaggio di pescatori è poi diventato una meta per le scampagnate dei Londinesi che la raggiungevano per vaporetto lungo l’estuario del Tamigi.

Ci siamo stati per la prima volta nel 1983 e poi nel 1985.

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Ultimamente eravamo li nel 1998.

 

Ora, dopo un periodo di decadenza nelle sorti della cittadina, quando gli inglesi l’abbandonarono per le vacanze attorno il Mediterraneo, Whitstable è ritornata di moda ed è frequentatissima – affatto com’era quando siamo prima stati lì molti anni fa’. Questo cambiamento si riflette nel prezzo delle case e nell’offerta più vasta dei negozi. (Speranza per Bagni di Lucca?)

Il mare di Whitstable non è per niente profondo ed è idoneo per la raccolta di crostacei, ostriche e vongole. Il porto fu ideato da Thomas Telford, il grande ingeniere del secolo diciannovesimo che ispirò Nottolini, l’architetto del ponte delle catene a Fornoli. Attorno il porto ci sono le caratteristiche capanne dei pescatori, un mercato del pesce e dei gustosi ristoranti ittici.

Sebbene non abbia edifici di altissimo interesse storico, Whitstable contiene un suggestivo insieme di caratteristiche case ‘clapperboard’, cioè rivestite di assicelle di legno e degli edifici dell’era Giorgiana che ne fanno della sua high Street un attraente insieme pieno di varietà.

La spiaggia non è un gran che, composta dalla più parte di ciottoli. Ha, però, la sua atmosfera nordica con il miagolare dei gabbiani e le famiglie che vanno in cerca di granchi. Ho notato pochi nuotatori….

La galleria d’arte merita una visita.

Come lo merita anche il museo, che contiene un’antica locomotiva a vapore del 1830, Invicta, costruita da Stephenson figlio, e che operò nel primo servizio regolare di treni per passeggeri sulla linea conducente a Canterbury.

Come consueto, abbiamo concluso la nostra giornata a Whitstable in un pub. Ci è particolarmente piaciuto questo di epoca vittoriana. Evidentemente il landlord era appassionato di vecchie radio….

Ciao Whitstable e….alla prossima!

Anni passati,

il volo dei gabbiani:

maree nel tempo.

 

Florence’s Mecca

Florence has a wealth of antique and second-hand shops and markets. Luckily, one doesn’t have to be loaded with money to buy some very nice things. There are also what in Italy are called ‘compravendita’ shops i.e. shops where one can buy and also bring articles to sell (the shop takes a commission, of course, and the selling price lowers depending on the amount of time it’s been for sale). This kind of shop is also known as ‘contovendita’ which in English translates as ‘account sales’

On a recent visit to Florence I discovered this compravendita-contovendita shop near Piazza Ravenna which is three bridges upstream the Arno from the Ponte vecchio:

It’s truly an Aladdin’s cave, hence, perhaps the name…

The shop also has a web site giving listings of items for sale at

http://www.lameccacontovendita.it/articoli/

If you don’t know how to get to Piazza Ravenna by bus then, depending where you are in Florence, these are the buses that will get you there:

https://moovitapp.com/index/it/mezzi_pubblici-Piazza_Ravenna-Firenze-street_4293287-2022

Happy hunting!

 

 

Is Eurospin off itsTrolley?

I recently went to do my shopping at Fornaci di Barga’s ‘Eurospin’ supermarket (very competitive prices, especially for the wine) and searched my pocket for a coin to release a trolley from its stand. I then realized there was no need to do this as all trolleys were unchained.

 

My attention was drawn to this notice in the trolley-stand.

 

 

‘Accattonaggio’ (incidentally, spelt incorrectly on the notice) was a new word to me. I’d viewed Pasolini’s gritty film ‘Accattone’ many years ago and realized that the word had something to do with a rough life. ‘Accattonaggio’, in fact, means ‘begging’ and I realized why the trolleys no longer required a coin to be deposited in them for their release. It was to do with the fact that at many supermarkets in Italy there is a band of asylum seekers who ask you for your trolley, once you’ve placed its contents in your car boot, in order to take it back to the stand and claim your coin for their services rendered in returning it.

The notice reminded me of another sad situation, this time in London where barriers have been put in front of some stores to prevent rough sleepers from camping there overnight.

Could the ex-travellers on rubber dinghies across the Med have become so inopportunely aggressive at Fornaci’s Eurospin for these measures to be implemented by the store’s management or was that management really off its trolley?  I wonder. In any case there was the usual African bag and belt seller by the store entrance, with his wares elegantly laid out, talking to a couple of customers. So the store tolerated him, at least.

I have not seen this coinless-trolley system used elsewhere in our area. ‘Penny Market’ at Borgo a Mozzano has its usual bevvy of ‘trolley beggars’ but they have not appeared to me to be so impolite or insistent there.

In the meanwhile are we to see more instances of that vile habit, so endemic in Britain’s urban centres, of hijacking trolleys to dump them in ponds, rivers and creeks? After all that’s why the system of releasing trolleys only by the introduction of a pound coin was introduced in the first place!

 

(A Mountain of a problem? Leaving ‘Eurospin’, Fornaci di Barga with the lovely Pania Secca and Della Croce in front of us)